We’ve Moved!

Is the Cove turning a corner?

What’s the future hold for Anderson Cove? The
Bremerton neighborhood is getting a new park soon and some new life
is emerging on nearby 15th Street at Wycoff Avenue.

On Saturday, a group of about
70 of us took a walk to see the changes up close. We heard from
Lowell and Heidi Loxsimer, purveyors of one of Kitsap County’s best
breakfasts and lunches at the Hi-Lo Cafe. Then, we ventured a half
a mile on foot to the Lillian and James Walker Park, which is just
about ready to open. Finally, we walked back to Bualabdh Bos,
Bremerton’s new Irish pub.

Here’s some of the things we learned along the way:

Anderson’s Cove: Just who were the original
residents who gave the cove its name? They are John Peter Anderson
and Ellen Noren, both Swedish immigrants who were some of the first
settlers in what’s now West Bremerton. According to Lois Jacobs’
Childhood Memories of Anderson’s Cove, John Peter arrived at Port
Blakely in 1879 while his future wife would come to Seattle with
his sister in 1888.

John Peter had a homestead of 160 acres in the area where
Bremerton High School is now, selling it when he married Ellen and
buying 40 acres at their now-namesake cove. Sadly, John Peter died
in 1904, leaving Ellen to raise eight children on her own, not to
mention tend for the couple’s cows, chickens and orchard.

The Navy took much of the land for housing to accommodate the
city’s World War II building boom. Some of that housing and
infrastructure exists to this day.

There was a bridge?: A bridge once crossed
Anderson Cove, first to just foot traffic and later another for
vehicle access, according to Jacobs. It’s hard to know where
exactly the crossing was (I couldn’t find more detail) but it’s
likely the cove and surrounding marshlands used to go further
south, necessitating a route across them.

The Hi-Lo Cafe Secret: Heidi and Lowell Yoxsimer
explained that while the food they’ve been cooking up since 2006 is
a big part of their success, part of it is just enjoying
themselves.

“You have to keep it fun,” Heidi said.

The cafe recently expanded to open a waiting area to give
customers a place to standby until a table opens.

One thing I learned has been talk of a city plan for a
Lulu D. Haddon Park business district and community hub. But
Hi-Lo, it turns out, is simply ahead of its time.

James and Lillian Walker Park: Colette Berna, the
city’s park architect whose works include the revamped Lions,
Kiwanis and Blueberry parks, gave some history on the site. The
city was able to purchase four properties and develop this .62 acre
site with a $1.3 million state Department of Ecology grant. Since
then, they’ve used the money to install just about every technique
at capturing
stormwater to keep it out of Puget Sound. That includes a sand
filter collection system, pervious sidewalks, a biorention swale
and a Filterra system.

The parks department received $172,000 from the city’s
allocation of federal Community Development Block Grant funds,
creating a small amphitheater, grassy hillside and steps to
the beach below.
It’s slated to open in a month or two.

The park was named by the City Council for Lillian and James
Walker, whose civil rights work during the war and later years made
Bremerton a fairer place for all.

The Irish have arrived: To conclude the walk, we
stopped in to check out the new Irish pub
Bualabdh Bos (“Clap your Hands” in Gaelic). We flooded the
place as it opened at 3 p.m. but Sally Carey and Mark Camp were
happy to oblige. Camp, whose grandmother taught him to make savory
Irish dishes like meat pies, even offered some Irish toasts like
this one:

May your glass be ever full.
May the roof over your head be always strong.
And may you be in heaven half an hour before the devil knows you’re
dead.

Thanks to everyone who made this latest Story Walk successful.
See you in September for a walk through the old East High School
campus. Details to come.